Góp ý | Sitemap | Weblinks | Hỗ trợ
   
Science News
Home
Thông tin RSS
 Thông tin khoa học công nghệ

How Accurate Are Mouse Studies in Predicting Effects In Humans?

Mice and humans have genomes that are 85% identical, making them suitable and cost-effective stand-ins for humans in medical research. A recent article by University of Michigan evolutionary biologists Ben-Yang Liao and Jianzhi Zhang discussed how identical genes may behave differently in mice and men - and some essential to humans aren't missed at all by mice.

Photo: www.ornl.gov

"Everyone assumes that deletion of the same gene in the mouse and in humans produces the same phenotype (an observable trait such as presence or absence of a particular disease). That's the basis of using the mouse to study human disease," said Zhang, an associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology. "Our results show that may not always be the case."

Zhang and his graduate student Liao focused their study on so-called essential genes---genes which, through their effects on survival or fertility, are necessary for organisms to reach sexual maturity and reproduce. They then homed in on 120 essential human genes for which the mouse has an identical counterpart that also has been studied. Next they consulted a database that catalogs the results of experiments in which the mouse equivalents of human genes are deleted, or "knocked out."

If those 120 essential human genes are also essential in the mouse, deleting any of them should result in infertility or death before reproductive age. But the database showed an unexpected discrepancy.

"To our surprise, 22 percent of the 120 human essential genes are nonessential in the mouse," Zhang said. "I expected there would be some, but I never expected the percentage to be so high."

Intrigued, the researchers wanted to understand why the "essentiality" of some genes has changed in the time since human and mouse last shared a common ancestor. Looking more closely at the protein products of the individual genes that are essential in humans but nonessential in the mouse, they discovered that a much higher than expected percentage are located in the vacuole, a sac-like cellular structure that functions as a garbage dump---but a highly important garbage dump.

"The main function of the vacuole is to contain and degrade cellular wastes and toxins," Zhang said. "In humans, the absence of vacuole proteins causes those wastes and toxins to accumulate, often leading to fatal neurological diseases."

The same thing happens in the mouse, but at a much later stage of life, often past reproductive age. As a result, "many of these vacuole proteins are not so 'essential' to the mouse," Zhang said. "Even without the proteins, the mouse can survive long enough to reproduce."

The researchers speculated that in the course of primate evolution, as life span increased and reproductive age was delayed, efficient waste management became increasingly important.

Additional results of their analysis support the idea. By developing an index that incorporated metabolic rate (a measure of how fast cellular waste products are generated) and reproductive age, and then using that index to compare human and mouse, the researchers determined that the total amount of waste produced per gram of body mass from birth to reproductive age is about 18 times higher for humans than for the mouse.

"Hence, waste management is much more important in humans than in the mouse for maintaining proper cellular functions until the time of reproduction," Zhang said. "And when a biological process becomes more important to a species, the genes involved in that process tend to become essential."

Zhang acknowledges that the study involved a relatively small number of genes, and he hopes that other researchers will be able to confirm the results as more information on human and mouse genes becomes available.

"If our sample is unbiased, our results will have some important implications," he said. "First, in many genome projects, people draw inferences about gene function by using information from other model organisms. We need to be careful doing this because we now know that a large fraction of the genes may have different functions or different importance in different species."

In addition, the results raise concerns about the widespread use of mouse models for studying human disease.

"Our study does not say that mouse models are useless," Zhang said. "Even for those genes that have changed essentiality, the mouse model may provide useful information. For example, it may tell us the molecular function of the gene, even if the gene's importance differs between species. But for some diseases, such as neurological diseases related to vacuole proteins, the phenotype is so different that it may be necessary to establish a primate model."

Source: ScientificBlogging


Other News in topic

>> Rainforest fungus makes diesel (11/5/2008)

>> Panasonic Engineers Introduce Methanol Fuel Cell Prototype (10/27/2008)

>> Egg Whites Solve The 3-D Problem (10/27/2008)

>> Evolution stops here: Future Man will look the same, says scientist (10/15/2008)

>> Nissan uses bumblebee power in new car technology (9/30/2008)

>> Nanopencil Can Provide Terabit Data Storage Density (9/23/2008)

>> Important Twist in Supercapacitor Research (9/21/2008)

>> Purifying parasites with light (9/21/2008)

>> Sea of Grasses Could Yield Biofuels to Power Tomorrow (9/19/2008)

>> Viruses to power batteries of the future (9/2/2008)

>> Converting Sunlight To Cheaper Energy (8/28/2008)

>> Air-purifying church windows show early nanotechnology (8/25/2008)

>> Turning Waste Material Into Ethanol (8/20/2008)

>> Cow Power Could Generate Electricity For Millions (7/26/2008)

>> Microbes beneath sea floor genetically distinct (7/22/2008)


Back
 
View by date
From To
Search News by title
 
Website bình chọn thắng cảnh, kiến trúc, bài hát hay chào mừng Biên Hòa - Đồng Nai 310 năm
 Chuyên mục
 
 Liên kết

 Bầu chọn các cảnh quan, công trình kiến trúc đẹp và các bài hát hay

Đồng Nai - Thành tựu kinh tế xã hội 30 năm
Đại hội đại biểu tỉnh Đồng Nai lần thứ VII
Truyền hình trực tuyến 
Hệ thống tư vấn trực tuyến 
Văn phòng điện tử M-Office 
Chữ ký điện tử 
Giải thưởng doanh nghiệp ứng dụng hiệu quả công nghệ thông tin trong hoạt động sản xuất kinh doanh
 
 Quảng cáo
Gốm Đồng Nai 
Bưởi Tân Triều
 
 Khảo sát
Internet tốc độ cao Bạn có biết đến ADSL và có ý định sử dụng dịch vụ này?




Submit Survey  View Results
 
 Tình trạng website
People Online People Online:
Visitors Visitors: 22
Members Members: 0
Total Total: 22

Online Now Online Now:
 
  
  Print  
 Số lượt truy cập
Số lượt truy cập:

1122876